Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Shares of Vringo, Inc.
(AMEX:VRNG) are hammered down by 36% to $2.56 after hitting session low of
$1.75 as a federal judge this morning issued a major blow against a small tech
company alleging Internet giant Google Inc(NASDAQ:GOOG) and other companies
over accused patent violation.

Raymond A. Jackson, a
US District Judge ruled that if Vringo and its subsidiary, I/P Engine, influence
a jury that Google violated the patents, it cannot gather damages for the 6
years prior to the lawsuit’s filing the previous year.

Vringo is implementing
a formula that calls for collecting a percentage of Google’s revenue from 2005
to the present day. At the least, the company is owed $500 million, as Vringo
said.

Jackson has found that
Vringo and its predecessor waited too long to file a lawsuit since Google made
the patent technology public in the year 2005. The patents entails directing
adverts to particular Internet used based on the searches they execute.

The technology was
developed in the 1990s. The patents for the technology were acquired in 1998
and 2001. An attorney for Vringo has informed the jury that since the year
2004, Google’s profits have increased by 20% since it used a system that places
adverts on searches. At the end of 2011, Google posted revenue close to $38
billion and should top that figure by the end of 2012.

A lawyer on behalf of
Vringo asked the judge to hold back making a decision on the matter, known as
the law of laches, until it can present a refutation witness. The judge nixed
the idea since he found it to be procedurally unacceptable. To put it
differently, Vringo must have made the move sooner.

Jackson said that the
court is not approving Vringo of that chance.

The trial is predicted
to wrap up soon.

Google is the chief
defendant in the case. Vringo is also suing, for much lesser amounts, IAC, AOL,
Target and Ganett that incorporate same Internet advertising technology from
Google.